Post on 28-May-2020
AIX: Transport & Infrastructure brings togetherpublic and private sector investors, developers andother stakeholders to discuss the strategies,opportunities and partnerships necessary to unlockwider development.
The agenda will focus on:
• How to access early-stage financing and other DFI-led initiatives
• Shared-use infrastructure and regional projects
• Matching money to projects
• Scope for privately-led investment in Africa’s aviation industry and barriers to entry
• Critical issues for developing railway, port and road infrastructure, for donors, investors, host governments and consumers.
• How transport corridor projects work.
All exchanges are:
• Held under the Chatham House Rule
• Structured panel-led discussions and roundtables.
• Concluded with Africa Hardball – a political risk strategy round table, which examines issues including the capacity of governments to deliver on projects.
• Hosted at RSA House, the Royal Society of Arts’ historic headquarters in London, an ideal venue for networking, with good breakout spaces and rooms for private meetings.
Contact us
Lauren Andrews
T: +44 (0)1424 721667E: lauren@cbi-research.comW: africa-investment-exchange.com
CbITransport corridors
Shared-use infrastructure
PPP opportunities
Innovative �nancing
Mobilising funds
Exit strategies
A
Africa Investment Exchange:Transport & InfrastructureBridging the infrastructure investment gap
9-10 June 2016, RSA House, London
Supported by
africa-investment-exchange.com
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About us
CbI MeetingsCbI Meetings was formed in 2013 by Cross-border Information, anestablished Africa and Middle East- focused consultant active in primaryinfrastructure sectors. Led by experienced regional specialists, CbIworks closely with the project development community on issues thataffect public and private sector investment decisions.
In 2014 we created the Africa Investment Exchange, a series ofinternational meetings for leading investors in Africa’s high growthindustries. Our programme for 2016, will see the launch of a newInvestment Exchange series focused on the MENA region.
The agenda for all our Investment Exchange meetings are developed byconsultants and analysts at CbI who work closely with the projectdevelopment community on issues that affect public and private sectorinvestment decisions.
All exchanges are
• Held under the Chatham House Rule
• Structured panel-led discussions and roundtables.
• Concluded with Africa Hardball – a political risk strategy roundtable, which examines issues including the capacity of governments to deliver on projects.
• Hosted at RSA House, the Royal Society of Arts’ historic headquarters in London, an ideal venue for networking, with good breakout spaces and rooms for private meetings.
Directors
Bruno Coburn
Tel: +44 (0)1424 721667Email: bruno@cbi-meetings.co.uk
Nick Carn
Tel: +44 (0)1424 721667Email: nick@cbi-research.com
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Meetings
AIX: Transport & Infrastructure
Day one - Thursday 9 June 2016
Matching funding to projects and thendeveloping them
08h30 to 09h00Registration & coffee
09h00 to 09h30Setting the scene
Chair – Steve Cameron, Vice Chairman, BCA
After initial remarks from the chair, panellists set outwhat they would like to see emerge from AIX:Transport and Infrastructure, and their vision for thefocus sectors’ development over the next decade.
Stephane Gasne, Partner, Pinsent Masons
Andy Louw, Principal: Infrastructure Investment,Stanlib
Julia Prescot, Chief Strategy Officer, MeridiamInfrastructure
Cleopatra Shiceka, General Manager, TransnetFreight Rail
09h30 to 10h00Measuring funders’ performance
The annual Infrastructure Consortium for Africa (ICA)survey of its members and other stakeholders’commitments and disbursement to transport andother infrastructure sectors – energy, information andcommunications technology (ICT) and water – gives aquantifiable indication of official funding trends, andtheir impact on public and private sector investment.
• Jon Marks, Chairman, CbI will outline the latest ICA research into funding flows to see what it tells us about the sector, including progress towards promoting transport corridors and other priority projects.
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10h00 to 11h15Developing African transport and infrastructure
Building on the introductory remarks the panel willdiscuss the realities of attracting investment intransport infrastructure, including views on whethernational and regional transport planning prioritiesmatch the expectations of investors, developers andend users.
• Is private investment relevant to all but a few projects in the existing African environment?
• Should transport be considered a ‘public good’, facilitating broad economic development
• Private equity (PE) and other private sector investment and public private partnerships (PPPs) potential and performance to date – how many PPPs, for example, have come to financial close?
• Strategies and expectations for working with host governments.
11h015
Coffee
AIX: Transport & Infrastructure
11h45 to 12h45
Shared-use infrastructure and big-ticket regional
projects
Chair – Sean Gorman, Executive Director, HCF
International Advisers
Regional experts will share their insights on the
development and performance so far of major
regional corridors.
• Breaking mega-plans down into practical projects
• Regulatory issues and other challenges facing
cross-border schemes, including ease of access at
borders
• Leveraging mining and other extractive industry-
related investment to finance big ticket rail and
other infrastructure development.
• Shared-use versus integrated development.
Silvester Kasuku, Chief Executive Officer at the
LAPSSET Corridor Development Authority
Craig Sillars, Specialist, High Value Oppurtunities
Programme Mining, Environment & Water, UK Trade
& Investment
12h45
Lunch
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Practical approaches to sectoraldevelopment
14h00 to 15h15Project development - port, road, air, rail
Chair – Steve Cameron, Vice Chairman, BCA
Experts will discuss their experiences with port, road,air and rail projects and the synergies (potential andactual) that exist between these sub-sectors
infrastructure strategies.
• What are the hold-ups to developing infrastructure?
• Examples of successful project models and lessons that could be learned.
• What similarities are there between bankable projects across transport sub-sectors
• Who's getting it right? - Which markets do the panellists see as providing a good model for the planning and execution of transport and infrastructure strategies.
John Fossey, Maritime Transport Consultant, Moffatt & Nichol
Steven Gray, Director, Atuabo Free Port
Keith Kerr, Partner, Mango Aviation Partners
Chris Leonard, Commercial Manager, Nectar Group
Bernard Obika, Chief Executive, Roughton Group
15h15 Coffee
9-10 June
Day two - Friday 10 June 2016
09h00 to 09h45Africa Transport Public-Private Partnerships
With reflections on yesterday’s sessions, experts areinvited to look at PPP models in emerging markets.
• What are the important pre-requisites to a successful PPP programme?
• In search of a new model for African road and rail PPPs.
Stephen Harris, Director, PPP, Altra Capital
Juvenal Shiundu, Deputy Director, InternationalMaritime Organisation
09h45 to 10h30Municipality infrastructure and finance
How to ensure mobility in rapidly growing andcongested cities. Is it a question of human andfinancial capacity?
• Securing resources for public transportation
• Public private models for metro and bus rapid transit systems
Koen van Baekel, Financial Advisor Infrastructure &Transit, Rebel Group
James Addo, Director, Asensus Holdings
10h30 Coffee
11h00 to 12h30Innovative finance solutions
Chair – Romain Py, Head of Transactions, AfricanInfrastructure Investment Managers (AIIM)
This session will ask the critical question: are existingfinance mechanisms fit for purpose when it comes tomeeting the needs of a majority of infrastructureprojects? And what potential sources are there tocome?
• Development finance: how can DFIs leverage public funds to catalyse private investment?
• Risk mitigation: Is the risk mitigation toolset of guarantees etc adequate?
• Budget allocations: to what extent can national governments fund future infrastructure development? Are a majority of government
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15h45 to 17h00Matching money to projects
Chair – Roland Janssens, Director, Investec AssetManagement
A variety of different investors lay out their needs ifthey are to buy into port, road, air or rail transport.
• What conditions need to be met to get projects in the various categories funded
• Scope for privately led investment and barriers to entry
• Development finance’s role in promoting investment
Adefunke Adeyemi, Regional Head, Africa & MiddleEast, International Air Transport Association
Romain Py, Head of Transactions, AfricanInfrastructure Investment Managers (AIIM)
Antoine Trieux, Head of Africa – Global Infrastructure& Projects, Natixis
17h00 to 17h30Integrating transport infrastructure & servicesChair - Jon Marks, Chairman, CbI
The final half-hour will look at the interconnectivity ofthese sectors.
• Integrating ports and railways as well as roads and airports
• Supply chain model
• Implementing multi-modal strategy
Fred Amonya, Chair, Transport Systems Economics,World Road Association
Steve Cameron, Vice Chairman, BCA
Geoffrey de Mowbray, Chief Executive Officer, DintsInternational
17h30 – End of day one and Evening reception
AIX: Transport & Infrastructure
bodies fit for purpose?
• Local currencies: prospects for using local currencies in complex project financings
• Commercial investors: do they have sufficient appetite or capacity to meet demand for project finance and investment funds? What positive examples have we seen so far?
• Tapping the bond market: How to finance infrastructure projects through non-traditional sources?
• Newcomers: what are the prospects of matching pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, family offices, ‘impact investors’ to projects?
• Five years hence: What blockages in the system will we still be discussing? And where will we be looking back to say: ‘job well done?’
Robin Bromley-Martin, Chief Executive Officer, Port
Evolution and Development (Africa)
Ed Harkins, Head of Export Credit Financing,
Fieldstone
Gregory Kronsten, Head, Macroeconomic & Fixed
Income Research, FBN Capital
Jef Vincent, Chief Underwriting Officer, African
Trade Insurance Agency
Peter Zhang, Managing Director, SinoFortone Group
12h30
Lunch
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13h30 to 17h00Africa Hardball: Building trust across borders andgovernance within personalised policies
Led by CbI’s Jon Marks, a group of expert politicalanalysts including Paul Melley, Associate Fellow,Africa Programme, Chatham House, Patrick Smith,Editor, Africa Confidential and Michela Wrong,Journalist & Author will debate, with delegates,trends in the development of cross-borderrelations and problems of governance andimplementation:
The focus of Africa Hardball will be on personal andinstitutional politics, corruption and othergovernance issues, and on the capacity ofgovernments to deliver on projects. We willapproach this by looking at the politics of severalkey countries, including fragile states recoveringfrom conflict, those with governance issues toresolve and others central to developing the Pidavision.
Polities to be discussed in Africa Hardball willinclude Côte d’Ivoire, DR Congo, Guinea and theSahel states; Ethiopia, Eritrea and Kenya; Nigeria;and Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania and SouthAfrica. Others may, of course feature. Questions ofleadership (including graft and succession) will bediscussed in Hardball’s usually frank way.
Other issues will include prospects for regionalgroupings, including the East African Community,and the building of trust among competingleaderships and governments.
Africa Hardball will conclude with a scenario-
building exercise, to focus thinking and –
potentially – uncover unexpected conclusions.
17h00 End of AIX: Transport and Infrastructure
Sponsor our meetings
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Sponsorship packagesNumber of events sponsored
One Two Three
Standard package £7,000 £12,000 £16,000
Guest places per event 3 4 4
For each event sponsored:Corporate logo on event website, agenda, brochure and marketing emails
Corporate logo on the headline slides
Full-page colour ad in the meeting book
Corporate literature in meeting bag
Panel position – Number per event 1 2 2
Session chair – Number per event 1 1 2
Advanced package - tailored to include some or all of the following:
Exhibition space
One of the following at each event sponsored: Coffee break sponsor, Lunchsponsor, Delegate bag sponsor, Evening reception sponsor
Meeting room at RSA House for sponsor to conduct private meetings withclients and potential clients at AIX
Exclusivity – Sponsors that book early may choose to be an exclusive sponsorfor a category of business
Email nick@cbi-research.com to discuss pricing options
For sponsorship or speaker enquiries contact:
Nick CarnTel: +44 (0)1424 721667Email: nick@cbi-research.com
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Venue: RSA HouseDesigned in the early 1770s, RSAHouse is a famous centre forEnlightenment thinking, theintellectual and social home of someof the greatest thinkers and socialactivists of the past 200 years.
8 John Adam Street, London WC2N6EZ.
Please register those listed below at £1,600 plus £320 VAT per delegate.
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I have read and agreed to the terms and conditions for delegate bookingsand payment
Terms & Conditions Payments: All bookings madeprior to the conference must bepaid in full to guaranteeregistration. If payment is notmade at the time of booking,registration will be provisional.Cancellation: The fee is non-refundable if cancellation isreceived less than two weeksbefore the booked meeting. For acancellation before this date thefee will be refunded, less ahandling charge of £75.
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Attend our meetings
For registrations contact:
Lauren AndrewsTel: +44 (0)1424 721667Email: lauren@cbi-research.com